Published: Saturday, December 29, 2012 at 6:01 a.m.

Last Modified: Saturday, December 29, 2012 at 11:10 p.m.

CHICAGO — It wasn't hard to pinpoint why Auburn lost to No. 12 Illinois on Saturday. Twenty turnovers will do the trick.

While the Tigers kept coughing it up, Tracy Abrams scored 27 points to lead the Illini to an 81-79 victory.

Auburn coach Tony Barbee was not happy.

“We just have to take care of the basketball, it's plain and simple,” he said. “Illinois didn't press us one possession and we ended up with 20 (turnovers). If you watch them play, they're active with their hands, they get their hands on a lot of balls, but you can't be as careless as we were with the ball tonight. We have to address that before we get into (Southeastern Conference play).”

The Illini (13-1) saw an 11-point lead shrink to one in the closing minutes but they prevailed after falling to Missouri in the Braggin' Rights game a week earlier — their first loss under coach John Groce. Their next game is the Big 10 opener at Purdue on Wednesday.

Things got tense when Frankie Sullivan buried a 3 for Auburn (5-7) to make it 68-67 with 4:29 remaining. Illinois then hit 13 of 18 free throws the rest of the way for a rare win at the United Center, where they had dropped three straight and five of six after winning 18 in a row.

They can thank Abrams.

The sophomore guard came up big on a day when their star player Brandon Paul was off target, going 6 of 11 from the field and 13 of 15 from the free throw line while eclipsing his previous high by five points.

Paul, meanwhile, finished with 13 points but hit just 3 of 12 shots. He missed all five 3-point attempts and the Illini again struggled from the outside, going 4 of 15 after hitting 8 of 32 against Missouri.

Sullivan led Auburn with 21 points. Rob Chubb scored 13, and Allen Payne chipped in with 10 points and 10 rebounds. But there was the 20 turnovers — six by Chris Denson and five by Sullivan.

Barbee called that “just inexcusable,” and Sullivan wasn't about to argue.

“We were just being lazy with the ball, not executing,” Sullivan said. “It was more us (making mental mistakes), because they weren't really pressuring us.”

Josh Wallace hit a 3-pointer at the final buzzer for Auburn to make it a two-point game, but by then, the Illini had sealed the win.

Both teams hit 16 of 30 shots in the first half, but Illinois took a 47-42 lead with Abrams scoring 16 points. He hit two free throws with 4 minutes left in the half to break a 39-39 tie and start a 14-5 run that stretched into the second half.

The only points for Auburn during that stretch came on a three-point play by Wallace with 2:22 remaining before halftime and two free throws by Chubb with 17:15 left in the game before D.J. Richardson hit two of his own for Illinois, making it 53-44.

The Tigers went more than 7 minutes without a field goal before Sullivan's layup with 15 minutes remaining.

But Paul answered with a wild one of his own, flipping the ball over his shoulder and into the basket as he slipped near the baseline.

That was one of the highlight reel plays in a game that Groce said was the “grindiest 80-point game I've been involved in.”

Now, the real grind is beginning.

Groce, an assistant at Ohio State before taking the head coaching job at Ohio University, knows what to expect.

“Home, road, all of them are fistfights,” he said. “It's a great league. Toughness is really, really important. Execution is really important and then players making plays is important.”

<p>CHICAGO — It wasn't hard to pinpoint why Auburn lost to No. 12 Illinois on Saturday. Twenty turnovers will do the trick.</p><p>While the Tigers kept coughing it up, Tracy Abrams scored 27 points to lead the Illini to an 81-79 victory.</p><p>Auburn coach Tony Barbee was not happy.</p><p>“We just have to take care of the basketball, it's plain and simple,” he said. “Illinois didn't press us one possession and we ended up with 20 (turnovers). If you watch them play, they're active with their hands, they get their hands on a lot of balls, but you can't be as careless as we were with the ball tonight. We have to address that before we get into (Southeastern Conference play).”</p><p>The Illini (13-1) saw an 11-point lead shrink to one in the closing minutes but they prevailed after falling to Missouri in the Braggin' Rights game a week earlier — their first loss under coach John Groce. Their next game is the Big 10 opener at Purdue on Wednesday.</p><p>Things got tense when Frankie Sullivan buried a 3 for Auburn (5-7) to make it 68-67 with 4:29 remaining. Illinois then hit 13 of 18 free throws the rest of the way for a rare win at the United Center, where they had dropped three straight and five of six after winning 18 in a row. </p><p>They can thank Abrams.</p><p>The sophomore guard came up big on a day when their star player Brandon Paul was off target, going 6 of 11 from the field and 13 of 15 from the free throw line while eclipsing his previous high by five points.</p><p>Paul, meanwhile, finished with 13 points but hit just 3 of 12 shots. He missed all five 3-point attempts and the Illini again struggled from the outside, going 4 of 15 after hitting 8 of 32 against Missouri.</p><p>Even so, they head into conference play on a winning note.</p><p>“We going to stay level,” Abrams said. “We're going to try to execute our game plan.”</p><p>Sullivan led Auburn with 21 points. Rob Chubb scored 13, and Allen Payne chipped in with 10 points and 10 rebounds. But there was the 20 turnovers — six by Chris Denson and five by Sullivan.</p><p>Barbee called that “just inexcusable,” and Sullivan wasn't about to argue.</p><p>“We were just being lazy with the ball, not executing,” Sullivan said. “It was more us (making mental mistakes), because they weren't really pressuring us.”</p><p>Josh Wallace hit a 3-pointer at the final buzzer for Auburn to make it a two-point game, but by then, the Illini had sealed the win.</p><p>Both teams hit 16 of 30 shots in the first half, but Illinois took a 47-42 lead with Abrams scoring 16 points. He hit two free throws with 4 minutes left in the half to break a 39-39 tie and start a 14-5 run that stretched into the second half.</p><p>The only points for Auburn during that stretch came on a three-point play by Wallace with 2:22 remaining before halftime and two free throws by Chubb with 17:15 left in the game before D.J. Richardson hit two of his own for Illinois, making it 53-44.</p><p>The Tigers went more than 7 minutes without a field goal before Sullivan's layup with 15 minutes remaining. </p><p>But Paul answered with a wild one of his own, flipping the ball over his shoulder and into the basket as he slipped near the baseline.</p><p>That was one of the highlight reel plays in a game that Groce said was the “grindiest 80-point game I've been involved in.”</p><p>Now, the real grind is beginning.</p><p>Groce, an assistant at Ohio State before taking the head coaching job at Ohio University, knows what to expect.</p><p>“Home, road, all of them are fistfights,” he said. “It's a great league. Toughness is really, really important. Execution is really important and then players making plays is important.”</p>